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authorLinus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org>2005-04-16 18:20:36 -0400
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org>2005-04-16 18:20:36 -0400
commit1da177e4c3f41524e886b7f1b8a0c1fc7321cac2 (patch)
tree0bba044c4ce775e45a88a51686b5d9f90697ea9d /Documentation/networking/slicecom.txt
Linux-2.6.12-rc2v2.6.12-rc2
Initial git repository build. I'm not bothering with the full history, even though we have it. We can create a separate "historical" git archive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it's about 3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early git days unnecessarily complicated, when we don't have a lot of good infrastructure for it. Let it rip!
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1
2SliceCOM adapter user's documentation - for the 0.51 driver version
3
4Written by Bartók István <bartoki@itc.hu>
5
6English translation: Lakatos György <gyuri@itc.hu>
7Mon Dec 11 15:28:42 CET 2000
8
9Last modified: Wed Aug 29 17:25:37 CEST 2001
10
11-----------------------------------------------------------------
12
13Usage:
14
15Compiling the kernel:
16
17Code maturity level options
18 [*] Prompt for development and/or incomplete code/drivers
19
20Network device support
21 Wan interfaces
22 <M> MultiGate (COMX) synchronous
23 <M> Support for MUNICH based boards: SliceCOM, PCICOM (NEW)
24 <M> Support for HDLC and syncPPP...
25
26
27Loading the modules:
28
29modprobe comx
30
31modprobe comx-proto-ppp # module for Cisco-HDLC and SyncPPP protocols
32
33modprobe comx-hw-munich # the module logs information by the kernel
34 # about the detected boards
35
36
37Configuring the board:
38
39# This interface will use the Cisco-HDLC line protocol,
40# the timeslices assigned are 1,2 (128 KiBit line speed)
41# (the first data timeslice in the G.703 frame is no. 1)
42#
43mkdir /proc/comx/comx0.1/
44echo slicecom >/proc/comx/comx0.1/boardtype
45echo hdlc >/proc/comx/comx0.1/protocol
46echo 1 2 >/proc/comx/comx0.1/timeslots
47
48
49# This interface uses SyncPPP line protocol, the assigned
50# is no. 3 (64 KiBit line speed)
51#
52mkdir /proc/comx/comx0.2/
53echo slicecom >/proc/comx/comx0.2/boardtype
54echo ppp >/proc/comx/comx0.2/protocol
55echo 3 >/proc/comx/comx0.2/timeslots
56
57...
58
59ifconfig comx0.1 up
60ifconfig comx0.2 up
61
62-----------------------------------------------------------------
63
64The COMX interfaces use a 10 packet transmit queue by default, however WAN
65networks sometimes use bigger values (20 to 100), to utilize the line better
66by large traffic (though the line delay increases because of more packets
67join the queue).
68
69# ifconfig comx0 txqueuelen 50
70
71This option is only supported by the ifconfig command of the later
72distributions, which came with 2.2 kernels, such as RedHat 6.1 or Debian 2.2.
73
74You can download a newer netbase packet from
75http://www.debian.org/~rcw/2.2/netbase/ for Debian 2.1, which has a new
76ifconfig. You can get further information about using 2.2 kernel with
77Debian 2.1 from http://www.debian.org/releases/stable/running-kernel-2.2
78
79-----------------------------------------------------------------
80
81The SliceCom LEDs:
82
83red - on, if the interface is unconfigured, or it gets Remote Alarm-s
84green - on, if the board finds frame-sync in the received signal
85
86A bit more detailed:
87
88red: green: meaning:
89
90- - no frame-sync, no signal received, or signal SNAFU.
91- on "Everything is OK"
92on on Recepion is ok, but the remote end sends Remote Alarm
93on - The interface is unconfigured
94
95-----------------------------------------------------------------
96
97A more detailed description of the hardware setting options:
98
99The general and the protocol layer options described in the 'comx.txt' file
100apply to the SliceCom as well, I only summarize the SliceCom hardware specific
101settings below.
102
103The '/proc/comx' configuring interface:
104
105An interface directory should be created for every timeslot group with
106'mkdir', e,g: 'comx0', 'comx1' etc. The timeslots can be assigned here to the
107specific interface. The Cisco-like naming convention (serial3:1 - first
108timeslot group of the 3rd. board) can't be used here, because these mean IP
109aliasing in Linux.
110
111You can give any meaningful name to keep the configuration clear;
112e.g: 'comx0.1', 'comx0.2', 'comx1.1', comx1.2', if you have two boards
113with two interfaces each.
114
115Settings, which apply to the board:
116
117Neither 'io' nor 'irq' settings required, the driver uses the resources
118given by the PCI BIOS.
119
120comx0/boardnum - board number of the SliceCom in the PC (using the 'natural'
121 PCI order) as listed in '/proc/pci' or the output of the
122 'lspci' command, generally the slots nearer to the motherboard
123 PCI driver chips have the lower numbers.
124
125 Default: 0 (the counting starts with 0)
126
127Though the options below are to be set on a single interface, they apply to the
128whole board. The restriction, to use them on 'UP' interfaces, is because the
129command sequence below could lead to unpredicable results.
130
131 # echo 0 >boardnum
132 # echo internal >clock_source
133 # echo 1 >boardnum
134
135The sequence would set the clock source of board 0.
136
137These settings will persist after all the interfaces are cleared, but are
138cleared when the driver module is unloaded and loaded again.
139
140comx0/clock_source - source of the transmit clock
141 Usage:
142
143 # echo line >/proc/comx/comx0/clock_source
144 # echo internal >/proc/comx/comx0/clock_source
145
146 line - The Tx clock is being decoded if the input data stream,
147 if no clock seen on the input, then the board will use it's
148 own clock generator.
149
150 internal - The Tx clock is supplied by the builtin clock generator.
151
152 Default: line
153
154 Normally, the telecommunication company's end device (the HDSL
155 modem) provides the Tx clock, that's why 'line' is the default.
156
157comx0/framing - Switching CRC4 off/on
158
159 CRC4: 16 PCM frames (The 32 64Kibit channels are multiplexed into a
160 PCM frame, nothing to do with HDLC frames) are divided into 2x8
161 groups, each group has a 4 bit CRC.
162
163 # echo crc4 >/proc/comx/comx0/framing
164 # echo no-crc4 >/proc/comx/comx0/framing
165
166 Default is 'crc4', the Hungarian MATAV lines behave like this.
167 The traffic generally passes if this setting on both ends don't match.
168
169comx0/linecode - Setting the line coding
170
171 # echo hdb3 >/proc/comx/comx0/linecode
172 # echo ami >/proc/comx/comx0/linecode
173
174 Default a 'hdb3', MATAV lines use this.
175
176 (AMI coding is rarely used with E1 lines). Frame sync may occur, if
177 this setting doesn't match the other end's, but CRC4 and data errors
178 will come, which will result in CRC errors on HDLC/SyncPPP level.
179
180comx0/reg - direct access to the board's MUNICH (reg) and FALC (lbireg)
181comx0/lbireg circuit's registers
182
183 # echo >reg 0x04 0x0 - write 0 to register 4
184 # echo >reg 0x104 - write the contents of register 4 with
185 printk() to syslog
186
187WARNING! These are only for development purposes, messing with this will
188 result much trouble!
189
190comx0/loopback - Places a loop to the board's G.703 signals
191
192 # echo none >/proc/comx/comx0/loopback
193 # echo local >/proc/comx/comx0/loopback
194 # echo remote >/proc/comx/comx0/loopback
195
196 none - normal operation, no loop
197 local - the board receives it's own output
198 remote - the board sends the received data to the remote side
199
200 Default: none
201
202-----------------------------------------------------------------
203
204Interface (channel group in Cisco terms) settings:
205
206comx0/timeslots - which timeslots belong to the given interface
207
208 Setting:
209
210 # echo '1 5 2 6 7 8' >/proc/comx/comx0/timeslots
211
212 # cat /proc/comx/comx0/timeslots
213 1 2 5 6 7 8
214 #
215
216 Finding a timeslot:
217
218 # grep ' 4' /proc/comx/comx*/timeslots
219 /proc/comx/comx0/timeslots:1 3 4 5 6
220 #
221
222 The timeslots can be in any order, '1 2 3' is the same as '1 3 2'.
223
224 The interface has to be DOWN during the setting ('ifconfig comx0
225 down'), but the other interfaces could operate normally.
226
227 The driver checks if the assigned timeslots are vacant, if not, then
228 the setting won't be applied.
229
230 The timeslot values are treated as decimal numbers, not to misunderstand
231 values of 08, 09 form.
232
233-----------------------------------------------------------------
234
235Checking the interface and board status:
236
237- Lines beginning with ' ' (space) belong to the original output, the lines
238which begin with '//' are the comments.
239
240 papaya:~$ cat /proc/comx/comx1/status
241 Interface administrative status is UP, modem status is UP, protocol is UP
242 Modem status changes: 0, Transmitter status is IDLE, tbusy: 0
243 Interface load (input): 978376 / 947808 / 951024 bits/s (5s/5m/15m)
244 (output): 978376 / 947848 / 951024 bits/s (5s/5m/15m)
245 Debug flags: none
246 RX errors: len: 22, overrun: 1, crc: 0, aborts: 0
247 buffer overrun: 0, pbuffer overrun: 0
248 TX errors: underrun: 0
249 Line keepalive (value: 10) status UP [0]
250
251// The hardware specific part starts here:
252 Controller status:
253 No alarms
254
255// Alarm:
256//
257// No alarms - Everything OK
258//
259// LOS - Loss Of Signal - No signal sensed on the input
260// AIS - Alarm Indication Signal - The remot side sends '11111111'-s,
261// it tells, that there's an error condition, or it's not
262// initialised.
263// AUXP - Auxiliary Pattern Indication - 01010101.. received.
264// LFA - Loss of Frame Alignment - no frame sync received.
265// RRA - Receive Remote Alarm - the remote end's OK, but singnals error cond.
266// LMFA - Loss of CRC4 Multiframe Alignment - no CRC4 multiframe sync.
267// NMF - No Multiframe alignment Found after 400 msec - no such alarm using
268// no-crc4 or crc4 framing, see below.
269//
270// Other possible error messages:
271//
272// Transmit Line Short - the board felt, that it's output is short-circuited,
273// so it switched the transmission off. (The board can't definitely tell,
274// that it's output is short-circuited.)
275
276// Chained list of the received packets, for debug purposes:
277
278 Rx ring:
279 rafutott: 0
280 lastcheck: 50845731, jiffies: 51314281
281 base: 017b1858
282 rx_desc_ptr: 0
283 rx_desc_ptr: 017b1858
284 hw_curr_ptr: 017b1858
285 06040000 017b1868 017b1898 c016ff00
286 06040000 017b1878 017b1e9c c016ff00
287 46040000 017b1888 017b24a0 c016ff00
288 06040000 017b1858 017b2aa4 c016ff00
289
290// All the interfaces using the board: comx1, using the 1,2,...16 timeslots,
291// comx2, using timeslot 17, etc.
292
293 Interfaces using this board: (channel-group, interface, timeslots)
294 0 comx1: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
295 1 comx2: 17
296 2 comx3: 18
297 3 comx4: 19
298 4 comx5: 20
299 5 comx6: 21
300 6 comx7: 22
301 7 comx8: 23
302 8 comx9: 24
303 9 comx10: 25
304 10 comx11: 26
305 11 comx12: 27
306 12 comx13: 28
307 13 comx14: 29
308 14 comx15: 30
309 15 comx16: 31
310
311// The number of events handled by the driver during an interrupt cycle:
312
313 Interrupt work histogram:
314 hist[ 0]: 0 hist[ 1]: 2 hist[ 2]: 18574 hist[ 3]: 79
315 hist[ 4]: 14 hist[ 5]: 1 hist[ 6]: 0 hist[ 7]: 1
316 hist[ 8]: 0 hist[ 9]: 7
317
318// The number of packets to send in the Tx ring, when a new one arrived:
319
320 Tx ring histogram:
321 hist[ 0]: 2329 hist[ 1]: 0 hist[ 2]: 0 hist[ 3]: 0
322
323// The error counters of the E1 interface, according to the RFC2495,
324// (similar to the Cisco "show controllers e1" command's output:
325// http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios11/rbook/rinterfc.htm#xtocid25669126)
326
327Data in current interval (91 seconds elapsed):
328 9516 Line Code Violations, 65 Path Code Violations, 2 E-Bit Errors
329 0 Slip Secs, 2 Fr Loss Secs, 2 Line Err Secs, 0 Degraded Mins
330 0 Errored Secs, 0 Bursty Err Secs, 0 Severely Err Secs, 11 Unavail Secs
331Data in Interval 1 (15 minutes):
332 0 Line Code Violations, 0 Path Code Violations, 0 E-Bit Errors
333 0 Slip Secs, 0 Fr Loss Secs, 0 Line Err Secs, 0 Degraded Mins
334 0 Errored Secs, 0 Bursty Err Secs, 0 Severely Err Secs, 0 Unavail Secs
335Data in last 4 intervals (1 hour):
336 0 Line Code Violations, 0 Path Code Violations, 0 E-Bit Errors
337 0 Slip Secs, 0 Fr Loss Secs, 0 Line Err Secs, 0 Degraded Mins
338 0 Errored Secs, 0 Bursty Err Secs, 0 Severely Err Secs, 0 Unavail Secs
339Data in last 96 intervals (24 hours):
340 0 Line Code Violations, 0 Path Code Violations, 0 E-Bit Errors
341 0 Slip Secs, 0 Fr Loss Secs, 0 Line Err Secs, 0 Degraded Mins
342 0 Errored Secs, 0 Bursty Err Secs, 0 Severely Err Secs, 0 Unavail Secs
343
344-----------------------------------------------------------------
345
346Some unique options, (may get into the driver later):
347Treat them very carefully, these can cause much trouble!
348
349 modified CRC-4, for improved interworking of CRC-4 and non-CRC-4
350 devices: (see page 107 and g706 Annex B)
351 lbireg[ 0x1b ] |= 0x08
352 lbireg[ 0x1c ] |= 0xc0
353
354 - The NMF - 'No Multiframe alignment Found after 400 msec' alarm
355 comes into account.
356
357 FALC - the line driver chip.
358 local loop - I hear my transmission back.
359 remote loop - I echo the remote transmission back.
360
361 Something useful for finding errors:
362
363 - local loop for timeslot 1 in the FALC chip:
364
365 # echo >lbireg 0x1d 0x21
366
367 - Swithing the loop off:
368
369 # echo >lbireg 0x1d 0x00